Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas reveals he has laws protecting gay marriage and contraception in sight, after axing Roe v. Wade

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas reveals he has laws protecting gay marriage and contraception in sight, after axing Roe v. Wade

After overturning Roe v. Wade, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas declared that he had legislation protecting homosexual marriage and contraception in his sights.

Thomas urged his colleagues’ judges to reverse earlier decisions that followed the same legal precedent after Friday’s major judgment.

The proposed legal modifications, announced in a concurring opinion of the judgment written by Thomas, would place restrictions on homosexual marriage, same-sex sexual conduct, and women’s access to contraception.

It happens at a time when the Supreme Court controversially decided to overturn Roe v. Wade, a nearly 50-year-old ruling that gave women the right to an abortion under the Constitution.

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas called on fellow jurists to overturn previous landmark rulings after the court nixed Roe v. Wade on FridayA woman cries outside the Supreme Court Friday morning after the court rules that the 'Constitution does not confer a right to abortion'The court’s longest-serving justice, Clarence Thomas, praised the guidelines in a separate opinion published on Friday, but he also pointed out how it only addresses abortion-related rights for Americans.

The 74-year-old judge, George H.W. Bush appointment, continued by saying the court should reevaluate other instances that fell under prior due process rulings.

Thomas firmly believed that the court should apply the same reasoning to other significant cases because it was determined on Friday that the Due Process Clause of the Constitution does not guarantee a right to an abortion.

He cited three in particular – including 1965’s Griswold v. Connecticut, which allowed married couples to buy and use contraception, and 2015’s Obergefell v. Hodges, which allowed same-sex couples to legally marry.

Thomas' argument was entrenched in the belief that since the Constitution’s Due Process Clause was found not to secure a right to an abortion in Friday's ruling, the court should apply that same logic to other landmark cases

Thomas firmly believed that the court should apply the same reasoning to other significant cases because the Due Process Clause of the Constitution was determined to not provide a right to an abortion in Friday’s decision.

President Joe Biden addressed the nation from the White House's Cross Hall on Friday calling it 'a very solemn moment' and a 'sad day for the court and the country.' He also warned: 'If the rationale of the decision as released were to be sustained, a whole range of rights are in question. A whole range of rights'The most stunning suggestion made by the jurist was that the court reconsider Lawrence v. Texas, a 2003 decision that struck down several states’ century-old criminal penalties for sodomy.

All of these concern Americans’ fundamental rights to privacy, due process, and equal protection; these principles also played a major role in Friday’s Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization ruling.

Because of this, Thomas, 74, stated, “in future cases, we should review every substantive due process precedent set down by this Court, including Griswold, Lawrence, and Obergefell.”

The well-known conservative justice continued by saying that “we have a duty to ‘correct the wrong’ established in previous cases.”

The assertion from Thomas comes as members of the left had warned that such a ruling could lead to the reversal of other landmark cases, following Politco’s leak of an initial draft of the court’s decision in May.